• Ambrotypes
  • Short Film
    • Landscape
    • Wildlife
    • Black & White
    • Spain
    • Instagram
  • Blog
  • Jake Davis
Menu

Yellowstone & Grand Teton Photography Tours, Revealed in Nature

  • Ambrotypes
  • Short Film
  • Portfolios
    • Landscape
    • Wildlife
    • Black & White
    • Spain
    • Instagram
  • Blog
  • Jake Davis

"Fog Crossing" - How Knowledge of Wildlife Behavior Informs Photography

June 19, 2016

I had visualized this shot long before it came together. I knew that the elk crossed the river at dawn every morning to head into the timber for cover, so I had that going for me. However, where exactly they cross and whether there would be enough light for a photograph was an unknown, and then add that elk are extremely intelligent and wary, so they spook easily. As I set out in the dark before sunrise I could the bull bugling nearby. I quietly hiked to my spot and waited, meantime the prehistoric scream was getting louder and louder. Just as there was enough light on the river the bull appeared on the bank and began swimming across the river.

In Photo Tips, Behind the Image Tags Elk, Grand Teton, Nature Photography Tips, Wildlife Photography
← "Grizzly Shadows" - Turning Harsh Light Into a Beautiful Photograph